Hi Alan,
Actually if you go to View...Current View...Show Replies to My Messages...
you will find the shortcut Ctrl+H listed there. Another shortcut I find
useful is the Ctrl+U to go to the next unread message.

Signature
JerryW
jweindel at flash dot net
> By complete accident, I hit Control-H while looking
> at the list of messages on this newsgroup in Outlook
[quoted text clipped - 17 lines]
>
> Alan
Alan Meyer - 20 Aug 2004 19:42 GMT
> Hi Alan,
>
> Actually if you go to View...Current View...Show Replies to My Messages...
> you will find the shortcut Ctrl+H listed there. Another shortcut I find
> useful is the Ctrl+U to go to the next unread message.
Thanks Jerry. It's amazing how we use software
for years and then suddenly discover it could do
things that we really wanted but never knew it
could do.
Alan
Glenn Enoch - 20 Aug 2004 23:37 GMT
I have been posting to this NG through Google. Is anyone using
Entourage to post (I have an iMac)?
> > Hi Alan,
> >
[quoted text clipped - 8 lines]
>
> Alan
Larry Wheat - 21 Aug 2004 23:10 GMT
Hi Glenn!
I'm a Mac user also --- I like this one:
http://www.macupdate.com/info.php/id/1011
It's a nice small shareware app that is fairly intuitive, and,
unlike Google, you get to see your message as soon as you post it.
Larry
> I have been posting to this NG through Google. Is anyone using Entourage
> to post (I have an iMac)?
[quoted text clipped - 7 lines]
> suddenly discover it could do > things that we really wanted but never
> knew it > could do. > > Alan
Most excellant, Dude. I know I never would have found that. Saves mucho
time! Thanks.
> By complete accident, I hit Control-H while looking
> at the list of messages on this newsgroup in Outlook
[quoted text clipped - 17 lines]
>
> Alan
After working on the Internet day after day for years, you develop tricks,
or you discover that something you?ve done repeatedly can be done more
easily. Once you discover a new method to navigate your computer or the web,
it quickly becomes second nature.
Function Keys
Take the "F5" key: It?s one of the most important keys for any web designer
and it?s useful for surfers too. With Internet Explorer, "F5" refreshes your
web browser, so you?re seeing the most recent version of the page.
Another useful key for Internet Explorer is "F11." Go ahead and try it.
"F11" will maximize your browser, allowing you to see as much of the web
page as possible on your monitor. When you want to shrink the window back to
size, press "F11" again.
"F1" is the universal Windows help button. Having a problem with an
application? "F1" is the first stop.
Need to close an application fast? If it's the active window try holding
down the "alt" key and "F4" together. If you have no applicactions open,
it's a quick way to shut down your Windows machine.
Familiar Tasks, New Tricks
Cut, Copy, and Paste are three of the most powerful tools in any computer
user?s arsenal. Having them available at a keystroke is vital. Highlight
some text with your mouse, then hold down the "control" key and press the
letter "C" at the same time -- the highlighted text is now copied. If you
wanted to cut the highlighted text, use "control" and the letter "X" to
erase it. And finally, to paste copied text or images into another document,
hold "control" and press the letter "V."
"Control" and "A" will select everything in your current application, which
is helpful if you want to copy and paste it later. The shift key can also be
helpful in selecting content. Click your curser in some text where you?d
like to begin selecting. Then hold shift and click again at the end of your
selection. This will select the whole block of text.
Fun with Scrolling
Personally I would be lost without my scroll mouse. That little wheel in the
middle of the mouse completely changes the way you use your computer. One
neat trick you can do with your scroll mouse is to change the size of text
in Microsoft applications, including Office and Internet Explorer. Hold down
the "control" key and move the scroll wheel. Text will grow or shrink
depending on which way you scroll. This won?t work on every website. Some
folks design their pages so text won?t scale, but it will work on most of
them, and can be useful if you?re using a monitor on the blink or just
forgot your glasses.
The Windows Key
When I first got a keyboard with a windows key, I thought it was a complete
annoyance, bringing back the desktop every time I hit the thing accidentally
during a rousing game of "Quake." Thankfully, new games don?t normally work
that way, and the Windows key --hiding out down there on the left between
"control" and "alt"-- can do some neat tricks. My favorite is holding the
windows key and pressing "D." All your windows are now minimized to give you
immediate access to the desktop. When you have three or four applications
open, this is a big time-saver.
Another favorite is Windows key and "E." Windows Explorer pops open, giving
you immediate access to your files.
And If you still can?t find the file you?re looking for, try the Windows key
and "F."
You probably already know some or most of these keyboard shortcuts, but even
if one of these is new, it can speed up your computer time and become a
habit you don?t even think about. You?ll know it has become second nature
the first time someone asks, "How did you do that?"
A Sherman - 26 Aug 2004 12:56 GMT
Thanks to all for this very useful thread.
I had been looking for the Ctrl-U shortcut. It is now firmly implanted into
my news reading routine.
I didn't see Ctrl-f3 in the discussion. This one displays the selected email
or news item as text (in OE6), including the full Internet header information.
You can get a concise list of most of these OE shortcuts by hitting help, then
finding keyboard shortcuts in the index.
-Al
> After working on the Internet day after day for years, you develop tricks,
> or you discover that something you?ve done repeatedly can be done more
[quoted text clipped - 68 lines]
> habit you don?t even think about. You?ll know it has become second nature
> the first time someone asks, "How did you do that?"
Use the space bar to scroll down for all those bottom posters and then it
will take you to the next unread message.
I love cool tricks!
Makes mine (control H) show my messages in red.
Bev
> By complete accident, I hit Control-H while looking
> at the list of messages on this newsgroup in Outlook
[quoted text clipped - 17 lines]
>
> Alan